edie 26

WORLD LAND TRUST at edie 26

A view of El Silencio

Why credible nature-based solutions matter now

A changing sustainability landscape
Sustainability expectations are shifting rapidly. Across Europe and beyond,
organisations are facing tighter regulations and greater scrutiny of climate and
nature claims. What was once acceptable is no longer sufficient, and what cannot
be substantiated increasingly carries reputational and regulatory risk. For businesses,
the question is no longer whether to act on nature but how to do so credibly.

What's Changing?

Stronger scrutiny of environmental claims

New rules are setting higher expectations for how organisations communicate their climate and nature action. Claims must be specific, evidence-based, and verifiable; vague or exaggerated language is increasingly being challenged.

Nature as a material business risk

Biodiversity loss is moving from a reporting topic to a strategic risk consideration, influencing supply chains, operations, finance, and long-term resilience.

Greater accountability in reposting

Sustainability disclosures are becoming more detailed, more auditable, and more closely aligned to real-world outcomes, particularly for nature and land use.

Hidden Life of REGUA

What this means in practice

Organisations need partners and interventions that:

•  Deliver real place-based outcomes
•  Are built on conservative, defensible assumptions
•  Will remain credible as standards continue to tighten
•  Reduce, rather than increase, greenwashing risk

Short-term fixes and overstated claims are increasingly exposed. Durability, governance, and permanence matter more now than ever.

A view of Atlantic Forest, REGUA.

How World Land Trust (WLT) responds

WLT focuses on permanent land protection and long-term stewardship, delivered through trusted local partners in some of the world’s most important ecosystems. Our approach is designed to support organisations operating in a high-scrutiny environment by prioritising:

• Permanent outcomes, not quick fixes
• Conservative, transparent impact claims
• Clear governance and long-term accountability
• Place-based action aligned with evolving science and standards

This enables organisations to take meaningful action for nature with confidence – today and into the future.

Play video World Land Trust | Saving Land, Saving Species

Saving Land, Saving Species

World Land Trust and its overseas project partners have been instrumental in the protection of more than 1.3 million hectares of tropical forest and other threatened habitats.

Watch the video for a summary of just a few of the Trust’s major activities and achievements.

WLT's CURRENT CARBON BALANCED PROJECTS

Bugoma-Wambabya Corridor, Uganda

Albertine Rift – Trees For Global Benefits

Carbon Balanced Reforestation
Live project

The Albertine Rift is an area of exceptional endemism, and contains many species threatened with global extinction, particularly within the mountain forest habitats. Within the project area, the native forests that make up the wider Bugoma-Budongo corridor are home to a staggering 52% of Africa’s bird species, 19% of its amphibians, 14% of its reptiles, and 14% of its plants.

Conservation Coast

Caribbean Guatemala – Conservation Coast

Carbon Balanced
Live project

Guatemala’s Caribbean coastline lies within one of the most wildlife-rich regions on Earth, the Mesoamerica Biodiversity Hotspot. With a diverse mosaic of lowland and tropical forests, lagoons, and mangrove swamps, this coastline is home to many highly threatened species. Among these are the Endangered Yucatan Black Howler Monkey , Keel-billed Motmot , and the largest native land mammal in Central and South America, Baird’s Tapir.

Oak tree, Mexico

North-central Mexico – Protecting Sierra Gorda

Carbon Balanced
Live project

This project covers approximately 10,000 Ha and brings together rangers and fire brigades to help protect more than 7,400 ha (18,200 acres) of Sierra Gorda reserves, while incentive programmes encourage forest owners to conserve a further 2,500 ha (6,100 acres) of land belonging to individual landholders or under Mexico’s unique ejido land tenancy system. WLT has supported GESG’s work in Sierra Gorda for many years, including funding land purchases and reserve protection activities…

Los Tities De San Juan

Los Titíes de San Juan

This world class ARR project with WLT partner, Fundación Proyecto Tití (FPT), lies within the Tumbes-ChocoMagdalena biodiversity hotspot and FPТ surveys have confirmed presence of 44 mammal species, 212 birds, 20 amphibians and 47 reptiles.

Proyecto Titi is named after the Cotton Top Tamarin, a tiny but charismatic primate, Critically Endangered and endemic to Northern Colombia.

Read More

More information

World Land Trust (WLT) provides partnerships designed to endure – grounded in strong governance, transparency, and defensible outcomes.

Download our brochure to read more.

Contact Us

If you have any further questions or would just like to have an informal chat about partnering with World Land Trust, please contact Tracey Butler, our Corporate Partnerships Manager, below.
  • Tracey Butler

    Corporate Partnerships Manager